How a Bill Becomes a Law: Crash Course Government and Politics #9 - YouTube

Channel: CrashCourse

[3]
This episode of Crash Course is brought to you by Squarespace.
[6]
Hi, I'm Craig, and this is Crash Course: Government and Politics, and today, I've got my work
[10]
cut out for me because I'm going to try to do something that every single social studies
[13]
teacher in the U.S. has tried to do, even though there is a perfectly good cartoon you
[17]
could just show. It's from the '70s. It's catchy. It's fun.
[20]
That's right, today we're going to learn how a bill becomes a law. But we're not going
[23]
to be able to license the Schoolhouse Rock song.
[25]
I'm just a bill, yes, I'm only a - you know what has a bill? An eagle.
[32]
[Theme Music]
[41]
Okay, I think the only way we're going to possibly be able to compete with Schoolhouse Rock
[44]
is to jump right into the Thought Bubble with our own cartoon. And to stop talking about Schoolhouse Rock.
[49]
So let's start at the very beginning, which in this case is a Congressman or a Senator
[52]
introducing a bill. The real beginning is when he or she has an idea for a law. And
[56]
even this might come from an interest group, the executive branch, or even the constituents.
[59]
But the formal process begins with the legislator introducing the bill.
[62]
After it's introduction, bill is referred to a committee.
[65]
Although most bills can start in either house, except for revenue bills, which must start
[68]
in THE House, let's imagine that our bill starts in the Senate, because it's easier.
[71]
Congress has the power to make rules concerning the Armed Forces, so let's say this is a bill
[75]
about naming helicopters. Anywho, this bill would be referred to the Senate Armed Services
[79]
Committee, which would then write up the bill in formal, legal language, or markup, and vote on it.
[83]
If the markup wins a majority in the committee, it moves to the floor of the full Senate for consideration.
[87]
The Senate decides the rules for debate - how long the debate will go on and whether or
[90]
not there will be amendments. An open rule allows for amendments and a closed rule does
[93]
not. Open rules make it much less likely for bills to pass because proponents of the bill
[97]
can add clauses that will make it hard for the bill's proponents to vote for.
[100]
If opponents of our helicopter name bill were to add a clause repealing the Affordable Care
[104]
Act or something, some supporters of the bill probably wouldn't vote for it. If a bill wins
[108]
the majority of the votes in the Senate, it moves onto the House. Thanks Thought Bubble.
[111]
We're going to have to go the rest of the way without fancy animation. But I could sing it.
[115]
Laaaa- I'm not going to sing it. I'm not going to use a funny voice.
[119]
The Senate version of the bill is sent to the House. The House has an extra step, in
[122]
that all bills before they go out to the floor of the House must go to the Rules Committee,
[126]
which reports it out to the House. If a bill receives the majority of votes in the House,
[129]
238 or more to be exact, it passes. YAY!
[133]
Now, this is important. The exact same bill has to pass both houses before it can go to
[137]
the president. This almost never happens though. Usually the second house to get the bill will
[141]
want to make some changes to it, and if this happens, it will go to a conference committee,
[144]
which is made up of members of both houses. The conference committee attempts to reconcile
[148]
both versions of the bill and come up with a new version, sometimes called a compromise bill.
[152]
Okay, so if the Conference Committee reaches a compromise, it then sends the bill back
[156]
to both houses for a new vote. If it passes, then it's sent to the President. And then
[160]
the President signs the bill, boom, done. That's the only option.
[163]
Oh, no, there's two other options, actually.
[165]
Option 2 is for him to veto the bill and we've gone through all of this for nothing.
[169]
The 3rd option is only available at the end of a congressional term. If the President
[172]
neither signs nor vetoes the bill, and then in the next 10 days, Congress goes out of
[176]
session, the bill does not become a law. This is called a pocket veto, and is only
[179]
used when the President doesn't want a law to pass, but for political reasons, doesn't want to veto it either.
[183]
Congress can avoid this all together by passing bills and giving them to the President before
[187]
that 10 day period. If the President neither signs nor vetoes a law and Congress remains
[191]
in session for more then 10 days, the bill becomes a law without the President's signature.
[195]
So that's the basic process, but there is one wrinkle, or if you want to be all Madisonian about it,
[199]
check, on the president's power.
[200]
If Congress really wanted a bill and the President has vetoed it, they can override the veto
[204]
if it gets a 2/3rd majority in both houses on a second vote. Then the bill becomes a law
[208]
over the President's signature. Aw snap!
[211]
This is really rare, but it does happen once in a great while. The Taft-Hartley Act of
[214]
1953 passed over Truman's veto. I like to call it the Tartley Act.
[218]
Shorten it. It's a portmanteau.
[220]
It doesn't happen that often because if the President knows that two thirds of the Congressmen
[223]
supported the bill, he won't veto it. And if Congress knows that they don't have two
[226]
thirds support, they won't try to override the veto. Nobody wants to try something and
[230]
fail in public, right? Except for me obviously, if you look at my other YouTube channel, WheezyWaiter.
[236]
Eh.
[237]
So there you have it, how a bill becomes a law. I'll admit, the process is a little cumbersome,
[242]
but it's designed that way so that we don't get a lot of stupid or dangerous laws. Still
[245]
this doesn't quite explain why so few laws get passed. Bills have a very high mortality
[249]
rate, and it's way more common for a bill not to become a law than to become one.
[252]
The main reason is that there are so many places where a bill can die.
[254]
The first place that a bill can die is at the murderous hands of the speaker or majority
[258]
leader, who refuses to refer it to committee. Then the committee can kill the bill by not
[261]
voting for it at all. And if they do vote and it doesn't get a majority then the bill
[265]
doesn't go to the floor, and it's dead.
[267]
In the Senate the murderous leadership can kill a bill by refusing to schedule a vote
[270]
on it. And any senator can filibuster the bill which is when he or she threatens to
[273]
keep debating until the bill is tabled. It's a bit more complex than that, but the filibuster
[277]
rules have changed recently, so hopefully we won't have as many filibuster threats in the future.
[281]
The House doesn't have a filibuster but it does have a Rules Committee that can kill
[284]
a bill by not creating a rule for debate. The entire House can also vote to recommit
[288]
the bill to committee, which is a signal to drop the bill or change it significantly.
[291]
And of course if either house fails to give a bill a majority of votes, then it dies.
[295]
This applies to compromise bills coming out of conference committees too. Even if a bill
[298]
gets a majority in both houses then there's that whole veto thing that the President can do. Remember?
[302]
So, there are many more ways for a bill to be killed than to become a law. These hurdles
[305]
are sometimes called veto gates.
[308]
They can't call 'em Bill Gates because that's a person.
[311]
Veto gates make it very difficult for Congress to act unless there's broad agreement or the
[315]
issue is uncontroversial like naming a post office or thanking specific groups of veterans
[318]
for their service, which are two things that Congress actually does pretty efficiently.
[322]
Think of all the post offices that aren't named. You can't think of one, can you?
[326]
Name it. You can't. It's not named.
[327]
Veto gates are purely procedural, which means they don't draw a lot of attention from the
[331]
media. The easiest way for Congress to kill bills is to simply not vote on them or even
[335]
schedule votes for them. This way they don't have to go on record as being for or against
[338]
a bill, just whether they support having a vote. And constituents rarely check up on this sort of thing.
[343]
So I hope I managed to do a good job of both explaining how a bill becomes a law and why
[346]
it's difficult for most bills to pass. And I hope I looked good doing it, as well.
[352]
This might be frustrating but it's strangely comforting to consider that Congress and the
[355]
government as a whole were designed to make it difficult to get things done. A single super-powerful
[359]
executive like a king can be very efficient, but also tyrannical. We don't like tyrannical around here.
[364]
The founders set up these structural hurdles of the bicameral Congress and the presidential
[368]
role in legislation to reduce the likelihood that authoritarian laws would pass. Congress
[372]
added procedural hurdles like committees and filibusters for the same reason. You can argue
[376]
that Congress has become dysfunctional, but looking at the process of lawmaking, it's
[379]
hard to argue that this isn't by design.
[381]
So next time someone accuses you of being difficult, you just say, "I was behaving in a senatorial manner."
[386]
Thanks for watching. I'll see you next episode
[388]
Crash Course: Government and Politics is produced in association with PBS Digital Studios. Support
[393]
for Crash Course US Government comes from Voqal. Voqal supports nonprofits that use technology and
[397]
media to advance social equity. Learn more about their mission and initiatives at voqal.org.
[402]
Crash Course was made with all of these nice people. Thanks for watching.